Results from a regional air quality forecast model, AIRPACT-3, are compared to OMI tropospheric NO2 integrated column densities for an 18 month period over the Pacific Northwest. AIRPACT column densities are well correlated (r=Combining double low line0.75) to cloud-free (<35%) retrievals of tropospheric NO2 for monthly averages without wildfires, but are poorly correlated (r=Combining double low line0.21) with significant model over-predictions for months with wildfires when OMI and AIRPACT are compared over the entire domain. AIRPACT predicts higher NO2 in some northwestern US urban areas, and lower NO2 in the Vancouver, BC urban area, when compared to OMI. Model results are spatially averaged to the daily OMI swath. The Dutch KNMI (DOMINO) and NASA (Standard Product) retrievals of tropospheric NO2 from OMI (Collection-3) are compared. The NASA product is shown to be significantly different than the KNMI tropospheric NO2 product. The average difference in tropospheric columns, after applying the averaging kernels of the respective products to the model results, is shown to be larger in the summer (±50%) than winter (±20%). © 2010 Author(s).
CITATION STYLE
Herron-Thorpe, F. L., Lamb, B. K., Mount, G. H., & Vaughan, J. K. (2010). Evaluation of a regional air quality forecast model for tropospheric NO2 columns using the OMI/Aura satellite tropospheric NO2 product. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 10(18), 8839–8854. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-10-8839-2010
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